Abstract

Uniaxial compressed stiff films on soft substrates can evolve into the period-doubling and folding instabilities, beyond the onset of sinusoidal wrinkling. The substrate is modeled as a neo-Hookean solid with a pre-stretch prior to film attachment, and its nonlinearity is obtained. Both the pre-stretch and the external nominal strain imposed on the film/substrate system can induce different substrate nonlinearity, and thus have different effects on the post-buckling mode evolution of the system. This study shows that the critical strain of period-doubling instability is linear to the pre-stretch. As the compressive nominal strain increases, the folding mode occurs beyond the onset of period-doubling in both the pre-tension and the pre-compression case, due to the softening/hardening effects for the inward/outward displacements generated by the positive substrate nonlinearity.

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